Credit: QZarTampa/Facebook

Credit: QZarTampa/Facebook

Yesterday, Q-Zar co-owner Brad Cohen said he was considering selling off laser tag equipment after his 25-year-old business shuts its doors for good this weekend. It looks like Cohen made a decision.

In an update to its website, Q-Zar, located at 7807 N. Dale Mabry Highway, wrote that it is selling “complete laser tag systems, spare parts, tables, chairs, signage, restaurant items and much more.”

Cohen has listed laser tag items—from the 40 gun refurbished system complete with the laser tag arena ($29,900) to the four-pack refurbished system ($995)—along with everything else like the pizza oven, freezers, phones, blacklights, computers and more.

Cohen says some of the nostalgia—including Q-Zar’s multi-panel indoor mural—is headed to the Laser Tag Museum in Louisville, Kentucky.

The final battles go down on Saturday, August 29 when Q-Zar dials prices back to 1995 and offers $7 laser tag games.

A list of items for sale is available via qzartampa.com. If buy the big'un 40-gun system, you gotta let us know and invite us over.

Credit: Q-Zar

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Read his 2016 intro letter and disclosures from 2022 and 2021. Ray Roa started freelancing for Creative Loafing Tampa in January 2011 and was hired as music editor in August 2016. He became Editor-In-Chief...